Malthus predicted that population growth would eventually outpace food supply, leading to widespread famine and poverty. He believed population grew geometrically while food production increased arithmetically. While some evidence supports Malthus, critics argue he underestimated human innovation in developing new technologies, opening new lands, and increasing yields. Boserup took an opposing view, believing population growth triggers agricultural innovations to increase food supply. Evidence supports both theories to some extent, though neither perfectly predicts outcomes. Overall, overpopulation remains a concern if resources are depleted and innovations do not match population growth.
3. Pessimistic Approaches
• Thomas Malthus (1776-1834)
• Wrote “An essay on the Principle
of Population” in 1798 which
described a forthcoming
population catastrophe
• World population was then nine million
• World population has now grown to close to
SEVEN billion
4. Malthus’ core principles
• Food is essential for life
• Population increases faster than food supply
• Therefore Malthus predicted that population
would grow until it reached the limit of food
supply, then there would be widespread
poverty and famine.
5. Malthus recognized that:
Population, if left unchecked, will grow
geometrically:
1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32
Whereas food supply increases arithmetically as
the amount of land is finite:
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
6. And therefore he said …
… there would be a Malthusian catastrophe:
At the point where
Food supply
Population
population reaches
its limit of food
supply there will be
war, famine and
disease.
Time
7. Malthusian Checks
• Malthus stated that once population reached
this point, checks would come into play to
readdress the balance between population
and resources:
1. positive checks – increased levels of
misery (war, famine and disease)
2. preventative checks – celibacy, later
marriage etc
8. Was Malthus right?
• Evidence to support Malthus:
– There has been a population explosion
– Repeated wars & famines in Sahel region of Africa
suggest population growth has outstripped food
supply
– FAO says that more than 800m people are
chronically malnourished
– UN say that by 2050 4.2billion people will be living
in areas that cannot provide enough water for
basic needs.
10. But …
• Critics say that Malthus did not allow for:
– the development of new technology
– The opening of new land for cultivation (mainly in the
LEDW – Less Developed World)
– The development of irrigation systems which have
allowed for increased yields
– The Green Revolution – widespread introduction of
high-yield crop varieties, pesticides, fertilizers etc
– The slow down in population growth as countries
develop economically and progress to the latter stages
of the DTM - Demographic Transition Model.
11. Neo-Malthusians
• Neo = new
• Accelerated population growth in LEDCs since
the 1950s renewed Malthusian fears
• 1972, The Club of Rome published “Limits to
Growth Model”
12. Club of Rome – basic conclusion
• If present growth trends continue, and if
associated industrialization, pollution, food
production and resource depletion continue
unchanged, the limits to growth on this planet
will be reached some time in the next one
hundred years.
• The most probable result being a sudden &
uncontrollable decline in population and
industrial capacity.
13. Is the Club of Rome right?
• Don’t panic yet!
• Doesn’t take into account the ability of
humans to respond to situations and innovate
• Human responses have changed e.g.
alternative energy, HYV – High Yield Variety
seeds sent to Africa
14. A more optimistic approach
• Ester Boserup (1910-1999)
• Wrote “The Conditions of
Agricultural Growth” in 1965
• Opposite to Malthus
• People have resources of knowledge and
technology to increase food supply as
necessary
15. Boserup’s main points
• Environments have limits that restrict
population
• But these limits can be changed using
technologies
• Population growth is the trigger for innovation
to allow food supply to increase
• e.g. irrigation, weeding, crop
intensification, better seed
quality, tools, techniques etc
16. Was Boserup right?
• Evidence which supports Boserup:
– Increasing intensity (agricultural intensification) of shifting
cultivation
– Move from ‘slash and burn’ practices to using
irrigation, fertilization, field prep, & weed control in rural
areas with higher population densities
– The Green Revolution – widespread introduction of high-
yielding varieties, pesticides etc
– Hugely increased yields allowed more people to be fed
– GMOs – Genetically Modified Organisms
17. Was Boserup right?
• Boserup admits that overpopulation can lead
to unsuitable farming practices which may
degrade the land
• E.g. population pressure as one of the reasons
for desertification in the Sahel region
20. Why Might Overpopulation be a
Concern?
•Declining birth rates
-Reasons for declining birth rates
•Reliance on economic development
•Distribution of contraceptives
-Reducing birth rates with contraception
22. World health threats
The epidemiologic transition
Stage 1: Pestilence and famine
The Black Plague
Pandemics
23. •World health threats
-The epidemiologic transition
•Stage 2: Receding
pandemics
-Cholera and
Dr. John Snow
24. World health threats
The epidemiologic transition
Stage 3: Degenerative diseases
Most significant: Heart disease and cancer
Stage 4: Delayed degenerative diseases
Medical advances prolong life
25. •World health threats
-The epidemiologic transition
•A possible stage 5: Reemergence of infectious
diseases?
-Three reasons why it might be happening:
•Evolution
•Poverty
•Improved travel